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The Tralfamadorians are a fictional alien race mentioned in several novels by Kurt Vonnegut. Tralfamadore is their home planet. Details on the inhabitants of the planet vary from novel to novel: * In ''Slaughterhouse-Five'', Tralfamadore is the home to beings who exist in all times simultaneously, and are thus privy to knowledge of future events, including the destruction of the universe at the hands of a Tralfamadorian test pilot. They kidnap Billy Pilgrim, the protagonist of the novel, and place him in a zoo on Tralfamadore with Montana Wildhack, a Hollywood starlet. * In ''The Sirens of Titan'', Tralfamadore is a planet in the Small Magellanic Cloud and the home of a civilization of machines, which dispatches Salo to a distant galaxy with a message for its inhabitants. After a part in his ship breaks, however, Salo is forced to land on Titan, a moon of Saturn, where he befriends Winston Niles Rumfoord. Rumfoord exists in much the same way as the Tralfamadorians of ''Slaughterhouse-Five'', while Salo appears to move in a linear fashion. The translation of Tralfamadore is given by Salo as both ''all of us'' and ''the number 541''. The Tralfamadorians were originally developed by super-beings who built them to give meaning to their own lives. Unable to achieve this task, the precursor race used the Tralfamadorians instead to extinguish themselves. * In ''God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater'', Tralfamadore is a hypothetical foreign planet, used in a purely rhetorical sense as part of a thought exercise. * In ''Hocus Pocus'', Tralfamadore is the planet nearest to a meeting place of ancient multi-dimensional beings who supposedly control all aspects of human life, including social affairs and politics. Unlike humans, the Tralfamadorians have too much of a sense of humor to be affected by the beings. The exploits of the multi-dimensional beings are chronicled in ''The Protocols of the Elders of Tralfamadore'' (a title which parodies ''The Protocols of the Elders of Zion''), which is published serially in a pornographic magazine called ''Black Garterbelt''. Though the author is never specified, the media in which it is published suggests that it may be Kilgore Trout. * In ''Timequake'', Tralfamadore is mentioned offhand as a fantastical meeting place of anthropomorphized chemical elements. == ''Slaughterhouse-Five'' == In the novel ''Slaughterhouse-Five'', protagonist Billy Pilgrim reports that the Tralfamadorians look like upright toilet plungers with a hand on top, into which is set a single green eye:
Tralfamadorians have the ability to experience reality in four dimensions; meaning, roughly, that they have total access to past, present, and future; they are able to perceive any point in time at will. Able to see along the timeline of the universe, they know the exact time and place of its accidental annihilation as the result of a Tralfamadorian experiment, but are powerless to prevent it. Because they believe that when a being dies, it continues to live in other times and places, their response to death is, "So it goes." They are placid in their fatalism, and patiently explain their philosophy to Pilgrim during the interval he spends caged in a Tralfamadorian zoo. Eventually Pilgrim adopts their attitude, is returned to Earth, and tries to spread their philosophy. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Tralfamadore」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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